One of my favorite things to do each year is to coordinate the APF’s Most Significant Futures Works program. Each year, we announce the winner at the APF reception that takes place alongside the WFS conference – this year it was in Washington DC on July 23rd. I am particularly excited that we are building a library of significant futures works….stretching back to 2007. So, when someone asks “what does good futures work look like, we have examples!
We had five winners this year. Each winner is recommended by a two-judge team and confirmed by the full panel of judges.
Category 1 Advance the methodology and practice of foresight and futures studies (all three are equal winners….no “places”)
- Scenario Exploration System; Laurent Bontoux (JRC), Daniel Bengtsson (former JRC), Aaron B. Rosa (HRCFS), John A. Sweeney (HRCFS/CPPFS) November 2015, (Report to be published in The Journal of Futures Studies, March 2016) (link)
- Symposium on Intuition in Futures Work, Edited by Oliver Markley, Article collection, Journal of Futures Studies, Sept. 2015. (link)
- What Works, by Sohail Inayatullah, Book, Tamkang University Press, Tamsui, Taiwan, 2015. (link)
Category 2 Analyze a significant future issue
- The Future of Protein. The Protein Challenge 2040: Shaping the Future of Food. Forum for the Future, Report, 2014. (link)
Category 3: Illuminate the future through literary or artistic works
- Humans Need Not Apply, by CGP Grey, Video (link)
I would like to acknowledge my fellow core committee members Cindy Frewen and Rowena Morrow and this year’s judges, without whom this program does not happen, were: Kristin Alford, Natalie Ambrose, Peter Bishop, Jim Breaux, Josh Calder, Bob Frame, Terry Grim, Tricia Lustig, Oliver Markley, Sam Miller, and Peter Padbury. Thank you all so much for another successful program. – Andy Hines
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